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Friday, June 1, 2012

from American Gloam:"Tropical Trash made me cut myself today. I was listening to their new seven-inch "Fear of Suffering"
while shaving. One of the sides ended unexpectedly on my record player.
I jumped to run and grab the record before the needle spilled and
scratched into the label hole. That jump cut my face with the razor,
straight into the cheek. Blood, pain, fear of suffering." ...[more @ American Gloam]

from Never Nervous:
There are quite a few triumphs that residents of Louisville have to be
excited about this Summer. For instance, we have a new record store on
the brick-and-mortar horizon called Astro Black Records, and we also are looking forward to the much anticipated debut seven inch record from post-rockers Tropical Trash.
My friend Jim Marlowe is behind both of these happenings and was nice
enough to sit down and answer a few questions about his new shop, the
upcoming Tropical Trash record, and so on and so forth...[more @ Never Nervous]

from Blogstitude:
On top of the pile we've got a brand new 7-inch EP by Tropical Trash,
a Louisville, Kentucky band with members that have or do put in time
with Blastitude favorite Sapat, and like that band, they play a strange
cool take on underground rock. The EP is called Fear of Suffering,
and it's got five tunes in all, one on the A and four quicker ones on
the B. Press blurb mentions MX-80 Sound and that is indeed a good
starting point. Weird, proggy, noise/experimental undertones, and, most
importantly, heavy without resorting to mere distorto-bludgeon. I look
forward to more material, and I'm excited that I'm not quite sure what
to expect from it. I'm not even sure what to expect the next time I play
this 7-inch. Editon of 200 on white from the Sophomore Lounge label.

from S-Records:
"Some members of the great Louisville band Sapat get together and do a
band that sounds like the bastard grandchildren of MX-80 Sound. These
guys definitely ingested a lot of "Crowd Control" and "Out of the
Tunnel" along with some Mission of Burma, while woodshedding to make
this record."

We
first heard from Tropical Trash on a split cassette with No Copper (we
have a few copies left if you want one!), their track was definitely
cool, but also listening to this 7" now a bit misleading, but it seems
that perhaps that track was intended for the split, as it was super
heavy and noisy and abstract, fusing jazzy avant noise with tripped out
experimental abstraction. Which is definitely a bit different that
what's to be found here, although not completely removed. TT seem to
traffic in a sort of chugging churning noise rock, at least on the A
side, thick angular riffs, tribal drumming, weird mathy arrangements,
strange sing songy vocals, buzzing distorted melodies that mirror the
vox, rife with some surprising poppiness, a distinctly indie rock vibe
going on for sure. Loose and ramshackle, with the song occasionally
devolving into a seemingly random free noise splatter before lurching
right back into action. The
B side offers up a handful of shorter songs and finds TT cranking up
the volume a bit, definitely heavier and punkier, sounding in places
like a supercharged Polvo or Pitchblende, weird chords, still more
mathiness, but still plenty of melody and catchiness as well as the
occasional punky blow out and some cool tripped out droniness. Features
members of Siltbreeze outfit Sapat.LIMITED TO 200 COPIES. Pressed on white vinyl! In handscreened covers with photo copied inserts.

from Yellow Green Red:Tropical TrashFear Of Suffering 7″ (Sophomore Lounge)Wonderfully
strange debut 7″ from Louisville’s Tropical Trash here. Wasn’t sure
what to expect, I mean this could’ve been anything, but Tropical Trash
do this sort of weird deconstructed rock thing that couldn’t have really
come from anywhere but itself. A-side “Baltimore” sounds like
later-period Landed attempting a Dinosaur Jr. cover, at least for the
moments between mosh-core breakdowns – see what I’m saying? The b-side
pulls in even stranger directions, recalling atmospheric black-metal
(kinda), Dischord-ish post-hardcore (sorta), and noisy artsy-fartsy-ness
(maybe). Maybe I just really like the band name (I do), but this weird
melange of styles somehow makes sense when taken as a whole – I bet
this’d be a fun live band to see. You can’t sound like Tropical Trash
and not have at least one crazy-looking guy in the band.

LAST BUT NOT LEAST -

OPENING MID JUNE 2012 @ 930 BAXTER AVE INSIDE OF QUILLS COFFEE

A new and used record store specializing in Avant-Rock, Jazz,
Free/Improv, Modern Composition, Experimental, Small/Private Press/DIY
music (and generally anything considered left-of-center) with a serious
focus on vinyl LP’s. The goal of the shop is to provide a physical
space/locus in this city for music that is (generally speaking) not
found in brick and mortar record stores: the marginal and the ‘weird’.
We’re always looking to buy single copies or collections of records that
fall within the scope of the shop.